DaveM,
Apologies for the delay in responding. Not sure why but I was responding to some of the later posts first.
I am not surprised that it makes no sense to you. If Christians struggle with this concept it can hardly be expected that the non-Christians would not do likewise. The only difference is that for many Christians this seems to be what Scripture teaches and thus Christians need to grapple with the idea and seek answers if possible.
Or perhaps question whether the intractable contradictions suggest that Scripture is just primitive moral philosophy rather than a “God-inspired” rule book?
Christian responses to this issue generally fall into three broad categories.
There are those, a minority, who seem to relish in the idea of perpetual condemnation. But this is not a Christian attitude as Scripture makes it clear that God takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked but would rather they should turn from their ways and live.
“Wicked” here presumably defined as, “what Christians decide it means". There’s are some who are condemnatory here I’d say, and they seem to be able to pull out quotes from eg Leviticus that
do confirm their biases (albeit that they do so selectively – the shellfish eaters get off pretty lightly for example).
Others simply reject the doctrine and conclude that Universalism must be correct.
Fair enough. Why then bother being a Christian at all though given that the prize of eternal non-fattening pizza and endless re-runs of Songs of Praise is on offer anyway?
Others, like myself, struggle with the concept but accept that this is the teaching of Scripture. This is but one of a number of issues, like the problem of suffering that the Christian grapples with. And like suffering, although we can reach some tentative conclusions, we fall short of even ‘seeing through a glass darkly’ in our search for answers that satisfy. In the end we accept that there are certain problems where we will not know the true answers this side of the grave.
Personally, I reach for my shotgun when a Christian reacts to the contradictions in his faith beliefs with this “it’s a mystery” escape clause. It just assumes a benevolent “God” and the inerrancy of Scripture, and so concludes that when the logic collapses that must be a fault in reasoning rather than with the assumptions in the first place.
Why not instead challenge the assumptions?
Of course issues like these have no influence on the fact that God ‘is’.
That’s not a fact at all – it’s your personal faith belief, and just asserting it to be fact is called the fallacy of reification.
But they do confront with the challenge to think very deeply over the nature of God and why we still believe and have come to know that He is a God of Love.
So why do you? If you must have “God” and you don’t want to dodge the problems you’ve identified with the “it’s a mystery” line, wouldn’t it at least be better aligned with the observable facts to think “Him” to be an evil rather than a loving deity?